BootX and the Stuffit Fiasco. In the Debian distribution, BootX is compressed with Aladdin's Stuffit application.
Since Apple includes a working copy of StuffitExpander on most of its OS cds, it is the de facto compression standard on the Macintosh Platform. If a Mac is still running, chances are there is a copy of Stuffit on the Hard Drive. Use FIND for Stuffit Expander. Stuffit can also access other compression formats such as zip, tar, uuencode - if you installed the expander enhancer. Unfortunately, the newest versions of Stuffit (5 & above) will create archives that cannot be opened by their elders. This has the unfortunate side effect of requiring elders & others to register with Aladdin Systems just so they may download the latest decompressor. MacOS 7.61 CD - I couldn't find StuffitExpander on this disc, yet its code is present in America Online v3.0. MacOS 8.1 CD has ver 4.02 of StuffitExpander. But you have to run the internet access installer and take both Netscape & Internet Explorer & more to get it. (Has anyone tried tome-viewer to pull just Stuffit from this CD?) MacOS 8.5 CD has a ready to use copy of Stuffit ver4.5 buried deep. Use Find. MacOS 9 CD has a ready to use copy of Stuffit ver 5.14. Use the Find daemon to retrieve it. I believe the Stuffit self-expanding archive format works across the majority of the MacOS spectrum. (much wider that DebianPPC) Is there a reason not to use that file format for the Debian PowerMac install items? Thanks, Layne